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Today we have a special Democratic National Convention broadcast: TOM FRANK says that, even though Obama continued Bush’s TARP, Bush’s secrecy policies, and Bush’s drone program, and adopted Romney’s health care proposals, the Republicans have denounced him as a “socialist.” Tom writes the “Easy Chair” column for Harper’s.
Plus: HAROLD MEYERSON says 100 years ago the political challenge to the power of great wealth was more significant than it is today — look at Teddy Roosevelt in 1912: he fought for a federal minimum wage, an end to child labor and federal insurance that covered “the hazards of sickness, accident, invalidism, involuntary unemployment and old age.” Also: a legal right for workers to unionize. Harold writes for the Washington Post op-ed page and The American Prospect.
Also: The Real Romney – SCOTT HELMAN of the Boston Globe may know more about Mitt Romney than anybody else in journalism – he’ll talk about the things Romney himself won’t: Romney and Bain Capital, Romney in Massachusetts politics, and Romney as a Mormon. He’s co-author of The Real Romney, out now in paperback.
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Also: Boom and bust in the new old west:
The man who killed six at the Sikh temple in Wisconsin was a prominent white-supremacist: JOHN NICHOLS explains.
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Also: What happens if Republican vote suppression tactics succeed in November, and Mitt Romney is elected because Democrats who are poor, young or minorities were prevented from voting? What do we do then? 
Also : PETER EDELMAN is one of my heroes — he resigned from the Clinton adminstration in protest against Clinton’s treatment of the poor in “the abolition of welfare as we know it.” Today he talks about how we can end poverty in America now – and what’s stopping us.
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And: Barack Obama’s mother, the amazing Ann Dunham: she married a black man – Barack Obama Sr. — when she was 18, then he left her after Barack Jr. was born; she got him into the best school in Honolulu, and then she left for Java and worked with poor women in the third world for more than a decade.
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Plus:
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Plus: LILLIAN HELLMAN was the most successful woman playwright in American history and a hero of the fight against HUAC – and also, 